Alleged officer impersonator sentenced for false ID
Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT-MESA -- In an unexpected twist to a bizarre episode, a
46-year-old man arrested on suspicion of impersonating a police officer
pleaded guilty Wednesday to possessing false identification.
A Superior Court judge sentenced Jesus Delcarmen Delgardo Sanchez to
two days in jail -- time he has already served -- eight days of voluntary
community service, a year of probation and a $100 fine.
Police said they caught Sanchez with a plastic Costa Mesa Police
Department badge, a blue shirt with a fire department patch on its sleeve
and a flashing yellow light on the roof of his car.
An officer arrested him in the wee hours of Tuesday morning when he
saw Sanchez posing as a police officer while trying to stop a woman in
another car.
The outcome of the case has “come as a big surprise to us,” said Costa
Mesa Police Lt. Dale Birney.
“This case is done and adjudicated,” he said. “And it happened really
fast.”
But an investigation is continuing as police are looking for
additional victims, he said. The woman whom Sanchez was seen stopping
Tuesday left the scene before the officer could talk with her, Birney
said.
“If we’re able to make additional cases based on the people who come
forward with information, we will try and get [those charges] filed,” he
said. “This whole case has turned out to be very weird.”
But to Superior Court Judge Brett London, who heard the case and
handed down the sentence, it was clear.
He said the district attorney had charged Sanchez with possessing
false identification, not impersonating a police officer.
“The D.A. reviewed those charges but rejected them,” London said. “I
can only deal with what is in front of me.”
Also, London said Sanchez seemed to have a squeaky clean past.
“He had no priors, had never been arrested and had a clean [Department
of Motor Vehicles] record,” he said.
That influenced his verdict significantly, London said.
He added that Sanchez’s sentence was consistent with what he hands
down to others charged with possessing false identification. He called
this “a typical case of possession of false ID.”
Sanchez is being held on a no-bail Immigration and Naturalization
Service hold. He was released to Costa Mesa Police Department on
Wednesday and later handed over to the INS in Santa Ana.
Costa Mesa police are asking anybody who has information on Sanchez to
call Det. Mike Cacho at (714) 754-5340.
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